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Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions

O(2) adsorption is a key process for further understanding the mechanism of selective CO oxidation (SCO) on gold catalysts. Rate constants related to the elementary steps of O(2) adsorption, desorption and surface bonding, as well as the respective activation energies, over a nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3...

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Autores principales: Gavril, Dimitrios, Georgaka, Aglaia, Karaiskakis, George
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6268671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22543503
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules17054878
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author Gavril, Dimitrios
Georgaka, Aglaia
Karaiskakis, George
author_facet Gavril, Dimitrios
Georgaka, Aglaia
Karaiskakis, George
author_sort Gavril, Dimitrios
collection PubMed
description O(2) adsorption is a key process for further understanding the mechanism of selective CO oxidation (SCO) on gold catalysts. Rate constants related to the elementary steps of O(2) adsorption, desorption and surface bonding, as well as the respective activation energies, over a nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) catalyst, were determined by Reversed-Flow Inverse Gas Chromatography (RF-IGC). The present study, carried-out in a wide temperature range (50–300 °C), both in excess as well as in the absence of H(2), resulted in mechanistic insights and kinetic as well as energetic comparisons, on the sorption processes of SCO reactants. In the absence of H(2), the rate of O(2) binding, over Au/γ-Al(2)O(3), drastically changes with rising temperature, indicating possible O(2) dissociation at elevated temperatures. H(2) facilitates stronger O(2) bonding at higher temperatures, while low temperature binding remains practically unaffected. The lower energy barriers observed, under H(2) rich conditions, can be correlated to O(2) dissociation after hydrogenation. Although, H(2) enhances both selective CO reactant’s desorption, O(2) desorption is more favored than that of CO, in agreement with the well-known mild bonding of SCO reactant’s at lower temperatures. The experimentally observed drastic change in the strength of CO and O(2) binding is consistent both with well-known high activity of SCO at ambient temperatures, as well as with the loss of selectivity at higher temperatures.
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spelling pubmed-62686712018-12-20 Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions Gavril, Dimitrios Georgaka, Aglaia Karaiskakis, George Molecules Article O(2) adsorption is a key process for further understanding the mechanism of selective CO oxidation (SCO) on gold catalysts. Rate constants related to the elementary steps of O(2) adsorption, desorption and surface bonding, as well as the respective activation energies, over a nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) catalyst, were determined by Reversed-Flow Inverse Gas Chromatography (RF-IGC). The present study, carried-out in a wide temperature range (50–300 °C), both in excess as well as in the absence of H(2), resulted in mechanistic insights and kinetic as well as energetic comparisons, on the sorption processes of SCO reactants. In the absence of H(2), the rate of O(2) binding, over Au/γ-Al(2)O(3), drastically changes with rising temperature, indicating possible O(2) dissociation at elevated temperatures. H(2) facilitates stronger O(2) bonding at higher temperatures, while low temperature binding remains practically unaffected. The lower energy barriers observed, under H(2) rich conditions, can be correlated to O(2) dissociation after hydrogenation. Although, H(2) enhances both selective CO reactant’s desorption, O(2) desorption is more favored than that of CO, in agreement with the well-known mild bonding of SCO reactant’s at lower temperatures. The experimentally observed drastic change in the strength of CO and O(2) binding is consistent both with well-known high activity of SCO at ambient temperatures, as well as with the loss of selectivity at higher temperatures. MDPI 2012-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6268671/ /pubmed/22543503 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules17054878 Text en © 2012 by MDPI, Basel, Switzerland http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Gavril, Dimitrios
Georgaka, Aglaia
Karaiskakis, George
Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions
title Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions
title_full Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions
title_fullStr Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions
title_short Kinetic Study of Oxygen Adsorption over Nanosized Au/γ-Al(2)O(3) Supported Catalysts under Selective CO Oxidation Conditions
title_sort kinetic study of oxygen adsorption over nanosized au/γ-al(2)o(3) supported catalysts under selective co oxidation conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6268671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22543503
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules17054878
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